Redeye Collective

Redeye

News EN ↓ 737 episodes

A progressive take on current events. Produced by an independent media collective at Vancouver Cooperative Radio.

Author

Redeye Collective

Category

News

Podcast website

www.vcn.bc.ca

Latest episode

Jul 5, 2026

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Episodes

Anti-feminist narratives impact housing choices for women 13.02.2026

As Canada grapples with a deep housing affordability crisis, women continue to experience some of the most severe housing needs. The Women’s National Housing & Homelessness Network say the role of anti-feminist ideology shapes who gets safe, adequate, and affordable housing—and who does not. We speak with research assistant Aymen Sherwani.

Vancouver needs more bus lanes to prevent FIFA gridlock 08.02.2026

Vancouver is a host city for the FIFA World Cup this year, co-hosted by Canada, Mexico, and the US. There are going to be seven matches at BC Place Stadium and an official FIFA Fan Festival at the PNE Amphitheatre. Organizers say more than a million visitors are expected province-wide, including over 360,000 during the tournament itself. The question is how all those people will move around the ci...

Time to ban tipping and enact a living wage 05.02.2026

The number of businesses inviting us to tip their workers is growing all the time. Tipping used to be restricted to full service restaurants, but now it’s spread to coffee chains and fast-food joints. A new analysis published by BC Policy Solutions proposes that it’s time to finally ban tipping in Canada and enact a living wage. We speak with Simon Pek, one of the authors of the piece.

Big oil should pay its share for climate-drive insurance crisis 03.02.2026

The Insurance Bureau of Canada said natural disaster claims cost a record 8.5 billion dollars in 2024 due to the increased frequency and severity of weather-related losses. Now Canada’s insurance sector is talking about the potential for the country to become uninsurable in 10 years, due to insufficient policy action on escalating climate disasters. Sue Big Oil is a campaign to pass along a share...

City Beat: Council to consider multiple redevelopment and rezoning plans 01.02.2026

Vancouver Council has booked themselves a heavy meeting schedule between now and the municipal election in October. Over and above their general council and committee meetings, they have 20 public hearing dates, with multiple redevelopment and rezoning applications to consider. Redeye’s Ian Mass joins us to talk about rezonings, world cup soccer, fireworks,  Vancouver politics and lots more i...

Food insecurity and the Hungry Stories Project 28.01.2026

The Hungry Stories Project is a team of scholars, dietitians and artists who are fighting for the elimination of food insecurity by sharing what it takes to collectively care for each other’s food needs.  They are producing resources to understand food insecurity, and they say that we need to look at root causes. Dr. Jennifer Black is a member of the Hungry Stories Project  and Associate...

First Nation challenges chronic underfunding of on-reserve services for kids 26.01.2026

First Nations across the country are reporting a  major loss of funding for children’s programs after the federal government changed Jordan’s Principle rules last February. Mis­sissaugas of the Credit First Nation have been at a hearing at the Cana­dian Human Rights Tribunal since October, accusing Ott­awa of sys­tem­at­ic­ally under­fund­ing on-reserve child and family services in Canada. We...

Addressing the lack of BIPOC artists and writers in Wikipedia 21.01.2026

The Vancouver organization Rungh has conducted several Wikipedia Edit-a-thon events and, in 2024, they launched Rungh Wikipedia Scholars. The program focuses on researching and creating Wikipedia entries about BIPOC artists and communities. Kika Memeh is a Vancouver-based Nigerian writer, journalist, and interdisciplinary producer. She is one of 2025’s Rungh Wikipedia Scholars. She talks about her...

Gaza, Venezuela and Greenland mark end of world legal order set up in 1945 19.01.2026

The American invasion of Venezuela — along with fresh threats to annex Greenland — is seen by many commentators as marking the collapse of the international legal order, based on rules enshrined in the United Nations Charter of 1945. The events in Venezuela suggest that this system, with its emphasis on sovereignty and fundamental rights, has been replaced by one more like the pre-Second World War...

City Beat: Allowing more childcare in residential neighbourhoods 19.01.2026

Allowing more childcare in residential neighbourhoods, paying city staff and contractors a living wage, safe public washrooms for everybody and lots more. Redeye collective member Ian Mass brings us his preview of Vancouver Council’s agenda over the coming week with his City Beat report.

Skeenawild challenges environmental certificate of KSM gold-copper mine 14.01.2026

Under B.C.’s Environmental Assessment Act, industrial projects must be substantially started within a set period or their environmental certificates expire. KSM Mining ULC is arguing that its gold-copper mine in Northwestern BC is substantially started despite little having been done on the site in the past 10 years.  In December 2024, Ecojustice filed a judicial review on behalf of SkeenaWil...

Narwhal lawsuit against RCMP over arrest of journalist, in court Jan 12 12.01.2026

In 2021, Amber Bracken, a freelance photojournalist on assignment for the Narwhal, was arrested by the RCMP on Wet’suwet’en territory and held in jail for 3 days. The charges against her were later dropped. The Narwhal and Amber Bracken are suing the RCMP in a case about press freedom. That trial begins in Vancouver on Jan 12. We speak with Carol Linnitt, editor-in-chief of the Narwhal.

City Beat: A look back at 2025, plus a preview of 2026 11.01.2026

Vancouver politics were busy in 2025 and with an October 2026 municipal election approaching, things won't be quieting down any time soon. Redeye collective member Ian Mass brings us his New Year's City Beat report.

How narratives about disability influence government policies 29.12.2025

In Canada, the policies affecting disabled people do not always follow a consistent approach. Alfiya Battalova says our narratives around disability shape our policies – and some key laws reveal a profound tension in Canada’s approach to disability rights and social responsibility. Alfiya Battalova is Assistant Professor in Justice Studies at Royal Roads University.

Nakba exhibit at Canadian Museum of Human Rights to launch in 2026 27.12.2025

The Canadian Museum for Human Rights in Winnipeg was built to educate Canadians about stories of global injustice. Yet in the more than 10 years since it opened, it has not meaningfully acknowledged the dispossession of Palestinians in 1948 that resulted from the founding of Israel. But now the CMHR has announced an exhibit titled Palestine Uprooted: Nakba Past and Present to launch next year. Jon...

Parental rights movement and the attack on public education in Alberta 23.12.2025

As students across Alberta returned to class this fall, families were met with a slate of changes targeting queer and trans kids, ushered in by the United Conservative Party government. These changes were largely driven by the movement for parental rights. Heather Ganshorn is research director for Support Our Students Alberta and author of the report, Challenging Parental Rights. She talks with us...

OneBC's documentary Making A Killing fuels residential school denialism 21.12.2025

On December 2, the OneBC party released its documentary Making a Killing: Reconciliation, genocide and plunder in Canada. Since then, the writer and producer of the film Tim Thielmann, has been fired along with two other senior staff.  MLA Dallas Brodie has herself been removed as interim party leader.  But the documentary lives on, with Dallas Brodie voicing Thielmann’s script and inter...

Court rules in favour of First Nations challenge of BC mining regime 19.12.2025

The Gitxaała & Ehattesaht First Nations have launched a court challenge to BC's free-entry mining regime. In a precedent-setting decision released last week, the BC Court of Appeal has affirmed that BC’s Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act creates legally enforceable obligations on the province to reform the mining permit process. We talk with Jamie Kneen of MiningWatch.

Dec 11 Solar panels on farm lands can increase crop yields 11.12.2025

Solar farm projects in Alberta have stalled because of new provincial regulations. Yet some Canadian researchers are saying photovoltaic systems now produce the lowest-cost electricity in history and using them in agriculture increases crop yields. We speak with Joshua Pearce, co-author of a new study on agrivoltaics.

Legal and historical risks of new pipeline to the Northwest coast 09.12.2025

As hundreds of First Nations leaders gathered last week in Ottawa for their annual December meeting, the federal-provincial memorandum of understanding for a new pipeline to Asian markets was high on the agenda. The Assembly of First Nations chiefs voted unanimously on Tuesday to demand the withdrawal of the deal and expressed full support for First Nations on the British Columbia coast strongly o...

City Beat: Controversy over Mayor Sim's Filipino Cultural Centre proposal 07.12.2025

Next week Vancouver City Council will consider Mayor Ken Sim’s controversial proposal to fast-track a new Filipino Cultural Centre without community consultation. Also on the agenda, Vancouver’s Social Housing Initiative, plans to radically change the current plan for the Downtown Eastside and much more. We speak with Redeye’s Ian Mass.

Canada needs a generational investment in non-market and public housing 05.12.2025

Forty progressive economists and policy experts gathered in Ottawa in September for an economic summit called Elbows Up: A Practical Program for Canadian Sovereignty. Marc Lee is a senior economist with the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives and he was both a presenter and participant in the Summit. We speak with Marc about his takeaways from the summit and the need for Canada to make a gener...

Calls for grizzly hunt in wake of attack based on poor science 04.12.2025

In the wake of a serious grizzly bear attack on schoolchildren near Bella Coola, there are calls from some quarters for the province to revisit its ban on the grizzly bear hunt. The BC Wildlife Federation has called for a new trophy hunt on grizzlies.  Tandeep Sidhu is assistant professor in the Department of Sociology and Criminology at the University of Manitoba. We speak with him about the...

Resisting Danielle Smith's attack on trans youth in Alberta 02.12.2025

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith has introduced Bill 9 - a piece of legislation that aims to infringe on the rights of trans people. Smith has used the notwithstanding clause four times in the last three weeks. This time to shield three anti-transgender bills from legal challenges and to bypass Charter protected rights.  In response, queer activists are scaling up the campaign to defend these r...

Indigenous identity policies a dangerous case of institutional overreach 30.11.2025

The practice of people self-identifying as Indigenous has come into sharp focus after a number of high-profile cases of “pretendians” claiming to be Indigenous without evidence. However, far less attention has been given to Indigenous people being wrongly labelled as pretendians.  In a recent article for Policy Options, Debbie Martin argues that the rush for Indigenous identity policies at un...

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